Which explains the popularity of "Pumped Up Kicks" -- a novelty in the context you've drawn.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:01 (twelve years ago) link
hmm u make a convincing argument
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:02 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah if anything there's probably more unity - in terms of lots and lots of people listening to the same songs, albeit not necessarily buying - in pop music than there has been at any time in the last ten years.
I can go to an R&B club, a gay club, a bogan suburban pub, a teenbait top 40 club and a teenbait "commercial dance" club and hear much the same music in all of them.
― Tim F, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:07 (twelve years ago) link
I kind of agree with D on this - I had very similar thoughts about Powers the other day, that her whole style tells you exactly who she's writing for. The focus on backstory and half-complete sociological musings versus actually saying anything about the music itself, the insertion of anecdotes about parenting and/or shopping at Whole Foods to ground the music-listening in a particular socio-cultural worldview...she is so completely and perfectly NPR, and so perfectly suited to people who buy 10 CDs a year, that they might as well have grown her in a vat.
― 誤訳侮辱, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:19 (twelve years ago) link
isnt the argument that pop/top 40 is narrowing its aesthetic a point of favor deej's amorphous feeling that pop itself is becoming genrefied/more niche?
i mean i really do wonder how many people exist for whom 'top 40' is the boundaries of their musical xp other than yeah, v v young ppl. and even then. but i really have no idea where to even find that data, except to say that both nominal and relative # of people who are 'top 40 listeners' for ex is still decreasing? but im not on v solid ground arguing abt this stuff since have zero rl engagement w/ it
― Lamp, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:20 (twelve years ago) link
you should def keep arguing about it tho
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:22 (twelve years ago) link
wellllllllll
― Lamp, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:22 (twelve years ago) link
is he arguing or discussing
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:23 (twelve years ago) link
The focus on backstory and half-complete sociological musings versus actually saying anything about the music itself, the insertion of anecdotes about parenting and/or shopping at Whole Foods to ground the music-listening in a particular socio-cultural worldview...she is so completely and perfectly NPR, and so perfectly suited to people who buy 10 CDs a year, that they might as well have grown her in a vat.
I disagree with most of this, in part because being a generalist is what writing for a daily newspaper requires -- in 1988 and 2012.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:24 (twelve years ago) link
To me it's marvelous that within the confines of a daily newspaper Powers can recommend tuneYARDS, Pistol Annies, Taylor Swift, and have a reasonable discussion about Adele.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:25 (twelve years ago) link
we've all, including myself, made snarky remarks over the years about the NPR Tone but insofar as such a thing exists then Ann Powers' voice is a sharp, catholic approximate.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:26 (twelve years ago) link
The "grown her in a vat" thing is probably excessively snarky, since I like Ann as a person. But I have long been totally anti generalist music criticism. People who have something to say about everything have nothing to say about anything, is my view.
― 誤訳侮辱, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:29 (twelve years ago) link
that's nonsense!
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:30 (twelve years ago) link
that's really stupid
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:31 (twelve years ago) link
yeah i mean i don't mind the shopping at whole foods thing, or that she's writing to a generalist audience, i guess it's more that I don't get a sense of what she likes as much as a sense of what she thinks she needs to cover, all of which she's vaguely enthusiastic about, and as a result the coverage is of a fairly rote series of artists I guess? idk I guess I'd just like to see some more personality in it or something
idk I'm probably being unfair. at a certain pt. the job is covering what people are likely to care about. although i'm not sure that explains the tuneyards thing which is p niche right?
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:31 (twelve years ago) link
fwiw i always find her writing very insightful, this 'critique' is really about some small beans stuff
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:32 (twelve years ago) link
I argue twice a week with our daily newspaper's film critic, whom I like very much as a guy, but whose opinions I usually dismiss, and it's no secret. But I don't forget for a moment that in this climate -- when the J. Hobermans are losing sinecures all over the place -- the impossible tightrope a film/music critic must walk at a daily or weekly publication. How long can you inveigh against crap before readers turn on you and you get fired?
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:33 (twelve years ago) link
and I'm not hinting that these critics dilute their opinions or lie about them; it's just that keeping an open ear/eye on what the public consumes is a large part of the job.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:34 (twelve years ago) link
I'm not the biggest Ann Powers fan, but can't the insertion of anecdotes about parenting and/or shopping at Whole Foods simply be a means of engaging the reader? If they're good parenting anecdotes--funny, observant, related to the music under discussion, however tangentially (unless they're really good parenting anecdotes, and then I don't even need that)--then great. Truthfully, I'd rather read that than close analysis of the artist's mindset.
― clemenza, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:35 (twelve years ago) link
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, January 4, 2012 8:33 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
oh yeah i mean no question & im certainly not saying she sucks or should be fired
i guess it's this sense that her engagement w/ the pop charts maybe feels a little bit like fronting? like what does she *really* want to be reviewing? and I almost would rather (and i recognize this might threaten job security) know what she just sorta naturally was drawn to
obv i'm making a bunch of assumptions here abt what she 'likes' and 'really likes' but maybe what i'd like to read about & what her paper and her audience more generally want to read about are all difft things
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:38 (twelve years ago) link
bleh. i mean, i could be entirely misreading her, too.
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:39 (twelve years ago) link
i think that last part is a really safe assumption to make
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:39 (twelve years ago) link
No, she really does love chart pop!
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:40 (twelve years ago) link
― J0rdan S., Wednesday, January 4, 2012 8:39 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
how abt sharing your ideas instead of sniping, some dude jr.?
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:41 (twelve years ago) link
cuz i'm watching basketball right now
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:42 (twelve years ago) link
I've met her twice at EMP and have known her voice since the publication of the Big Orange SPIN Book on alternative rock and she's never been shy about her populist tendencies (her husband's tastes run closer to the other end, although he likes a lot of country).
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:42 (twelve years ago) link
I love when you two snipe at each other tbh
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:43 (twelve years ago) link
also i have no idea what article you guys are talking about, so that's another issue
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:44 (twelve years ago) link
yah i think maybe that's just what i'm bumping up against -- i feel like the way populism enters into my ideas of music is probably v different than hers
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:44 (twelve years ago) link
i shared lots of ideas itt just now, leave me out of this
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:45 (twelve years ago) link
in that SPIN guide she wrote about John Cale and Pearl Jam.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:45 (twelve years ago) link
among others; I'm just trying to suggest her breadth in 1994.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:46 (twelve years ago) link
but yeah i keep trying to find what powers article we're talking about and i guess the wilson slate piece is part of a back-and-forth w/ several people and there are multiple powers pieces in the series, don't know if there's one in particular that kicked this off (xpost)
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:47 (twelve years ago) link
i was speaking more from a general experience w/ her writing. I think it might just come down to, I have trouble imagining what a reader of ann powers would get from reading someone who puts "top 40" as a central part of their perspective. I guess. that it feels, i dunno, obsequious to an artificial structure, and that i get the feeling that at some point anything that is *that* successful gets treated w/ a geniality that ... idk maybe i'm a bitter person ha but sometimes i like when a person meets a 'system' like the charts and then you find out where they collide and where they coincide and i don't get as much of a friction from her writing
i think that's how i'd put it
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:51 (twelve years ago) link
haha i just reread and that's very abstract
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:52 (twelve years ago) link
i suspect only lamp could possibly decode me there
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:53 (twelve years ago) link
I'm coming from the same place as D on this - more of a general response to her work (as I perceive it; back in '94 I was mostly reading like Forced Exposure and The Wire and Metal Maniacs and totally ignoring Rolling Stone and Spin) than to any particular article. Though that whole Slate music critics' roundtable presents such a narrow idea of what's going on in the world that reading it drives me kinda batshit.
― 誤訳侮辱, Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:54 (twelve years ago) link
^^^ooh yeah thats a good pt ... it felt very uninvolving to me, like i almost wish that the writers had each found a corner of the world that they really enjoyed this year & talked about it, instead of like, "here's the common ground music we were all supposed to care about" because, like, i don't really care to read what the foremost thinkers in music crit have decided about katy perry! I'd rather just hear Nitsuh tell me what he really liked listening to this year, and explain why, and maybe it would be more like the TV show Check Please! except with music instead of restaurants, so everyone tries out each other's favorite thing & then they discuss from their perspective
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:57 (twelve years ago) link
It wasn't describing the world -- it wasn't a CIA memo -- it was describing how their choices for best albums related to other developments.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:58 (twelve years ago) link
OK, deej's point is a fair one, and it reminds me of the problems with "round tables" in general: it's impossible to control the ebb and flow once it starts.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 January 2012 02:59 (twelve years ago) link
yeah i mean you can't really gripe that a multi-perspective 'year in review' is too broad and centrist, that's the whole point
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:02 (twelve years ago) link
there has to be a common ground to talk about but i'd rather it be about interesting corners of the music world than the pop charts entirely
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:07 (twelve years ago) link
i'm sure all of them were very interested in talking about the weeknd, that's more 'interesting' than katy perry, right
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:12 (twelve years ago) link
well no, but one of nitsuh's fav rap records was kendrick lamar, and i think it would be really interesting to see ann powers tackle that, and i'm much more interested in reading a person that smart engaging w/ something i find interesting (and i just used that example b/c its in my wheelhouse but this could easily apply to stuff i haven't heard as well)
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:18 (twelve years ago) link
i mean, i guess it could easily be katy perry too, if ann felt very strongly about katy perry; i just didn't get the feeling we were reading about what the critics really liked, just what they were obligated to cover
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:19 (twelve years ago) link
yes it would be very fascinating if everyone talked about blog rap mo- zzzzzzzzzzz
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:20 (twelve years ago) link
kendrick is 'blog rap' to you, really?
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:20 (twelve years ago) link
everything is blog rap now -- i just mean rap that isn't fully in mainstream pop culture
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:22 (twelve years ago) link
im just saying i'd rather get the feeling that the critics were talking about something they were really interested in instead of centering around this idea of 'pop' as if pop music right now is the only music a big smart critic would talk about
of course in the real world this would likely end up w/ them just covering indie instead i guess so maybe ur right
but in my world, it's like, one dude suggests a jazz cd, someone suggests a hip-hop one, another a mainstream pop etc. and they all discuss those. i dunno, just thought it'd be more interesting to me than, like, well, let's tackle the pop charts.
― Regional Thug (D-40), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:24 (twelve years ago) link
a lot of stuff in that slate series is not very 'pop' or popular, and i don't get much of a sense that anybody is writing about pop music more than before because it's the thing to do. lots of critics still write exclusively about underground/niche stuff and always will, and people that can write about top 40 without being completely dismissive and condescending will save the others the trouble of coming down off their perches.
― we bought a zoo in a hopeless place (some dude), Thursday, 5 January 2012 03:29 (twelve years ago) link